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Explaining the colors of Mars EUROPEAN SPACE AGENCY NEWS RELEASE Posted: February 22, 2004
The first trio of images from the OMEGA instrument on ESA's Mars Express, released on January 23, showed some colorful views of Mars' south polar ice cap. That is mainly because two of the images were taken at infrared wavelengths that defy easy translation into color. So, they were displayed in 'false' color. William Smith, the British 'father' of geology, introduced false color to science in the 1800s. He wanted to draw a map of Great Britain to show the different types of rock that could be found across its surface and decided to color code the rocks. The colors were not intended to represent the true colors of the rocks, but simply to act as a key to identifying them. Political maps of the world also use of false color, clearly showing the boundaries between countries because of the sudden change of color.
The other two images, the middle one showing the distribution of carbon dioxide ice and the left-hand image showing the distribution of water ice are falsely colored. Both ice images are made from infrared radiation reflected by the surface of Mars. Because carbon dioxide and water absorb and reflect characteristically different wavelengths of infrared, OMEGA can identify each chemical compound by looking at the missing parts of the spectra received back from the surface. The astronomers then used false color to show how much ice had been detected at the polar cap. The color scale is blue to red. The bluer the area, the more carbon dioxide ice in the middle image and, in the left-hand image, the more water ice. Red areas are deficient and yellow areas are intermediate zones. Comparing the pictures, the wide yellow expanse on the left-hand image shows that the water ice is more widespread than the carbon dioxide ice. The carbon dioxide ice collects mostly in the blue peak of the middle image. With this early success, OMEGA's Principal Investigator Dr Jean-Pierre Bibring, Institut d'Astrophysique Spatiale, France, is looking forward to the rest of mission. He says, "Our goal now is to map the whole planet." So, as William Smith's 1815 map of Great Britain helped show the mineral wealth of England, Wales and Scotland, so OMEGA will eventually show the distribution of minerals and rock types across the surface of Mars. Like its predecessor, it too will be presented in glorious 'false' color. |
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